Saturday, July 18, 2009

RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:SANDER JARMULOWSKY+SONS:THE BERNARD MADOFFS OF THEIR TIME:

 RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:SANDER JARMULOWSKY+ SONS:THE BERNARD MADOFFS OF THEIR  TIME:
 
http://www.library.upenn.edu/exhibits/cajs/fellows09/Kobrin.html
 Shalom:
 
We have all heard enough of Bernie Madoff. Now that he has received what is a life sentence in prison, closure can perhaps begin for the people whose  lives he shattered. What hurts the most to me as a Rabbi, is that this was a Jew doing this to other Jews. Don't get me wrong. When I read of a Jew or any person treating one of God's fellow children shabbily, it cuts me like a knife. But when  Madoff surgically cut into and amputated live limbs of Jewish and other charities, well, I just don't have the words to describe how sick I felt when I first read of it.
 
But this is not the first time a Jewish American New Yorker conned fellow Jews who could least afford the losses. Our collective memories fade, perhaps because many synagogues do not have quality Jewish adult education programs, or perhaps we, unlike the authors of the TaNaK, do not want to record our warts.
 
The above photo is of the  Jarmulowsky Bank, on the corner of Orchard and Canal Streets, New York City, New York State, USA in 1912.

''After years of spiraling real estate prices, fears of long protracted war prodded thousands of New York Jews to withdraw money from their local banks during the summer of 1914. For years these "banks" had not only kept immigrant Jews' small deposits, but also helped them buy ship tickets for their loved ones in Europe and transfer money back there. Unable to return depositors' funds, New York State's Bank Superintendent forced one of the largest banks on New York's Lower East side, Alexander, aka Sender,  Jarmulowsky's bank, founded in 1873 and claiming over 60,000 depositors, to shutter its doors.

On August 30, 1914, the largest financially-driven riot in New York City history to date broke out in front of Jarmulovsky's bank. Demanding the bank return their deposits, the enraged crowd of East European Jews paraded to City Hall where they attacked clerks, forcing police to arrest nine and use clubs to quell rest. The riot frightened city officials, who assigned the city's revered judge, Learned Hand, to settle the claims.

Judge Hand soon uncovered that the bank's assets were all tied up in real estate speculation in East Harlem. The incident provoked a myriad of court cases, Hand to write precedent-setting judicial decisions and city officials to craft new banking legislation to protect New York from becoming infected with "speculitis," a disease all agreed was transforming not only New York but America itself.

While few today recognize the name Jarmulowsky or can identify this family's bank - nicknamed "the Temple of Capitalism," the building still stands on the corner of Canal street and East Broadway. This bank and its failure highlight a fascinating aspect of the American economy in the early-twentieth century: while East European Jews occupied marginal (and often disreputable) niches in the businesses of shipping and banking and invited suspicion from large portions of society, they nonetheless were able to move into the mainstream sectors of the economy in a comparatively brief time span by acquiring substantial capital through their risky ventures.'' Rebecca Kobrin, University of Pennsylvania, Katz Judaic Center

NY TIMES: Sender Jarmulowsky arrived in the United States from Russia in the early 1870's and by 1878 had established a bank in an existing building at the southwest corner of Canal and Orchard, already an immigrant district. In 1886, 1890, 1893 and 1901, he experienced various bank runs but proudly paid 100 cents on the dollar to each panicky depositor. In 1912, with the architects Rouse & Goldstone, Jarmulowsky put up a reserved, 12-story loft building with a bank on the ground floor at the same corner where he had established himself 30 years earlier.

It was, with its rusticated limestone lower section and a terra-cotta upper part, no barebones loft building. The entrance to the ground-floor bank at the curved corner is surmounted by two reclining figures in classical style flanking a clock. Period photographs of the banking floor show a conventional work of marble and bronze; it could have been any well-known uptown bank.

Sender Jarmulowsky died in 1912 as his building neared completion; The Times noted he left "only $501,053" as an estate, apparently expecting much more. His sons Harry and Louis continued the business. In 1917, as depositors withdrew nearly $3 million to send to overseas relatives caught in the war, the State Banking Department took over Sender Jarmulowsky's bank. It had liabilities of $1.25 million and assets of only $600,000. Over 5,000 depositors crowded around the branch and Harry and Louis Jarmulowsky were indicted for banking fraud later in the year. The bank never reopened and the building was sold at a bankruptcy auction in 1920.




In 1873 prominent philanthropist and Russian immigrant Sender Jarmulowsky founded a bank on the Lower East Side. Through his astute business sense and community connections the bank grew, and in 1912 Jarmulowsky  erected a structure at Orchard and Canal Streets magnificent enough for his successful company.

Unfortunately, Jarmulowsky died less than a month after the building was completed. Even more unfortunately, his bank failed only two years later, leaving thousands of its depositors penniless. Jarmulowsky himself had little to do with the bank's downfall. His seemingly risky business practices - granting loans to clients based on personality rather than financial standing - proved successful.

It was two of Jarmulowsky's sons who caused trouble, making bad real estate investments and mismanaging the institution they had inherited from their father. As World War I raged in Europe, crowds of Lower East Siders rushed to withdraw money for family across the Atlantic. Having squandered the bank's funds, the Jarmulovskys couldn't make good on their clients' deposits.

Two thousand people demonstrated in front of the bank. Five hundred people stormed the house where son Meyer lived, forcing him and his family to flee over the rooftops. Shortly after the State took over the bank in May 1917, the Jarmulowsky sons were indicted for banking fraud and the bank closed. The building, however, still remains.

Over the Rooftops

Below is a 1914 NY Times article chronicling Meyer Jarmulowsky's escape from a mob of angry depositors. A brief summary: crowds gathered around the banker's home on Fort Washington Avenue, demanding their money. Fearing for his safety, Jarmulowsky scampered from his rooftop onto a neighboring apartment house, descended into the building's basement, and dashed across the street into a waiting cab, narrowly avoiding capture by the protestors.

Click to enlarge



Family Drama

Sender Jarmulowsky's descendants (at least those that made it into the NY Times' extensive archive on the family) were as prone to scandal as their ancestor was widly successful. Not only were sons Albert and Meyer indicted for fraud after forcing their father's bank to close, but a third son was sent to Bellevue's psych ward. And then there was a grandson who was jailed for stealing $1,625 from a jewelry store manager, and (perhaps the strangest of all) a granddaughter, Bertha Clark, whose elopement to a linen salesman in 1911 dragged her family into a messy lawsuit. When the couple was kept apart for 17 days by Clark's furious parents, the groom demanded $100,000 in retributions.

''NOT A ROTHSCHILD, BUT A REAL BANKER''

At the southwest corner of Canal and Orchard streets is the impressive formal entrance to the bank Sender Jarmulowsky founded in 1873 and housed in this neoclassical skyscraper he built around 1895. Jarmulowsky's rise was one of those Horatio Alger stories that dazzled and emboldened the hardworking poor of the old neighborhood.

He began as a pushcart peddler, then moved up to selling goods to steady customers: a fine linen tablecloth for the Sabbath, silverware, perhaps silver candlesticks to replace those stolen at Ellis, furniture. Jarmulowsky extended credit and opened a "passage and exchange" office, where he bought steerage passages in bulk and offered his customers a chance to "pay out" the cost of bringing their relations from the other side "on time," precisely the way they bought bedroom sets. He also exchanged hard-earned greenbacks for the red-backed Russian rubles the toilers of the ghetto remitted back home. Extending credit, operating in the foreign currency markets, branching out to taking deposits, buying mortgages—a banker.

Jarmulowsky's bank, alas, failed in August 1914, when the neighborhood called up all its liquidity to send passage money to relations in the old country before the war trapped them for good.

The western wall of Jarmulowsky's building was for years a display of painted advertisements. Banquet halls and patent medicines predominated, but spinets were advertised as well. Girls from better-off families were expected as apprentice ladies to take piano lessons, so Papa would lay out for an upright. In the division of parental hopes and harassment, legions of ill-tempered boys drew bowstrings over innumerable violins, adding their screeches to those of the neighborhood's thousands of dispossessed and unwanted cats, as their parents prayed that a little virtuoso in the family, like Milstein, Zimbalist, or Heifetz (Yehudi Menuhin was the midget maestro to the generation of the twenties), could be their ticket out of the ghetto, to wealth and the grand world uptown. Irving Berlin, lately Izzy Baline of Cherry Street, sometime busker and singing waiter on the Bowery, began to write tunes; one of his earliest hits, in 1908, "Yidl with Your Fiddle, Play Some Ragtime," speaks volumes on the process called assimilation.

Plus ça change, plus c'est la meme chose. Our Talmud gives us wise advise on how to do honest business dealings. We ignore advice, we speculate, we act with greed, we trust in man and  not in God  ignoring Psalm 118:8 and we think because we are modern, we know better than our sages, our rabbis, and God Himself. We think that the nature of man has developed, has evolved, has changed. We are the same as we were in Gan Eden. We have a yetzer ha ra and  a yetzer tov. Which we decide to listen to, is the free will God has given us. We will have our Korachs, our Jarmulowskys, our Madoffs, and even Rabbis who murder their wives, or walk off with an eighth  of a million dollars without a word of teshuvah.

Our job as Jews, now that our task of survival and being accepted in the USA and other Western nations has been accomplished,  is to return to the common sense values and ethics and spirituality, via www.JewishSpiritualRenewal.org, via  Rabbi Arthur Segal : (001) The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew, so that as the Who sings "We Won't Be Fooled Again."

Shavuah tov, Shalom and many blessings,

Rabbi Arthur Segal

Jewish Spiritual Renewal, Jewish Renewal, Jewish Spirituality, Eco Judaism

Hilton Head Island, SC, Bluffton, SC, Savannah, GA

Member Temple Oseh Shalom

Acknowledgements to the Greenwich Village Times, NY Times, Tenement Museum, U of Penn Katz Center, American Heritage, Lower East Side Walking Tours, NY Landmarks Commission

RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:JEWISH RENEWAL:JEWISH SPIRITUALITY:

RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:JEWISH RENEWAL:JEWISH SPIRITUALITY:
 
Shavuah Tov:
 
It was the Talmudic sage Chanina ben Hama who said, "I have learned much from my teachers, from my colleagues even more, but from my students I have learned the most." (Talmud Bavli Tractate Ta'anit 7a).
 
In my posting on:
Rabbi Arthur Segal: RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:ALL BEGINNINGS ARE HARD:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL: CHAIM POTOK  a www.JewishSpiritualRenewal.org essay to help those going thru changes due to the economy, I received some interesting feedback from Talmidim v Chaverim. As with all Talmudic discussions we end up far off the track. That is what makes studying Talmud fun.
 
Dr. Chris B writes: Here's a little footnote for the discussion on whether or not the first steps of creation were hard for God.

Even though the common understanding today is that the  letter "bet" was placed first in the creation of the world so that it would be a blessing (Zohar I 3a), an older story from Genesis Rabbah (Genesis Rabbah XII:10)states that the universe was created with the letter "heh."

"R. Abbahu said in R. Johanan's name: He created them with the letter heh. All letters demand an effort to pronounce them, whereas the heh demands no effort.  Similarly, not with labor or wearying toil did the Holy One, blessed be He, create His world, but By the word of the Lord (Psalm 33:6), and The heavens were already made (ib.)."  (Genesis Rabbah XII:10)

The proof text for this view is Genesis 2:4, "These are the generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created."  According to Genesis Rabbah, the word for "when they were created," BEHIBBARAM, can be rewritten
as BET-HEH BARAM, "with 'heh' they were created," and since "heh" is just the sound that is made by expelling the breath through the mouth, it requires no effort.  This midrash also explains why on the Kabbalistic Tree of Life the first path from Keter to Chochmah has the letter "heh" assigned to it.

Whereas creation may be, for God, as effortless as aspiration is for us, I would also argue that this world is purposely set up so that beginnings are hard for people.  For example, think of a dream.  In a dream there are no physical laws to obey, and we can be it as soon as we dream it.  However, in this world we have to operate under constraints that we commonly refer to as the laws of physics.  In particular, Newton's First Law of Motion states that an object that is at rest will remain at rest until a force acts upon it.  In other words, every change in this world requires effort on our part. Is this a punitive restriction?  I don't think so because if there were no such constraints in our physical world, then our reality would be just as unstable as our dreams.  Consequently, the world is a much more stable and enduring place simply because change and beginnings do require effort on our part. 
---
Now  I love the midrash Dr Chris B. quoted. Of course YHWH or YHVH is all Breath, our last conscious  act before sleeping, our first conscious act upon waking , which we thank YHWH for in Modeh Ani. YHVH Breath   changes us from Adamah to Adam when we are born, and then when  He withdraws our last breath, changes us from Adam to Adamah again, when our soul departs to Olam Ha Ba.
----
 Judy  writes: Check out the first verse of Leviticus.  Start with the first yud, count 7 letters, circle the next letter.  Do this till you have four circles.  Too fun for words.
__
And then Marty wrote: (And this is fun as well):
Yes. We get YHVH from doing letter counting with  Leviticus
 
But here is some more fun to do during boring rabbinic sermons. Lol.
 
Go to Genesis. Start with the first Tuv ( Ivrit T in Beresheit). Count 50 letters to the Vuv. (with a vowel this V can be silent and just be an 'O' sound). Count 50 more to the Reish. Count 50 more to the Heh. Heh, guess what, we spelled, TORAH.
 
Now let's say its Yom Kippur and the sermon is really long and boring.
 
So flip to the start of Exodus. Start with the first Tuv (T at the end of the second word, Shemot, Names, which is what Exodus is really called.)
 
Count 50 letters and you come to a Vuv.  50 more  to Reish. 50 more  to Heh. Heh, heh, heh.... more Torah.
 
Now the rabbi's sermon is really getting bogged down. He is talking about teshuvah on Yom Kippur and he drove his Porsche to Temple and his wife packed him lunch.
 
So, ok, we flip to Numbers. Now the rabbi has our heads all backwards. So that is what we do. We go to the third heh. we count 50, and come to a reish. Count 50 more and come to a vuv. Count 50 more and come to a tuv. We have Torah backwards which is what the Rabbi on the bimah seems to be preaching.
 
Ok. The rabbi is still going on and on. Now the cantor is on his knees asking the congregation for forgiveness and saying how humble he is before them. The rabbi is complaining that he is more humble than the cantor. The president of the temple has called an emergency board meeting during the lunch time break of Yom Kippur at Wong's House of Dim Sum.
 
So we flip to Deuteronomy.
 
We have been taught that Deuteronomy doesn't really begin until the 5th verse where it says "Moses expounded on the Torah,'' as that is what the book is about. So we start with the heh in the word ha-yordin (the Jordan), and count 50, and come to a reish, and continue as we did in Numbers, and we have Torah backwards again.
 
So what do we have going from the The Beginning to the end of Torah?: Torah > Torah > YHVH < haroT < haroT .
 
Could this be code to remind us to obey the 50 year Yovels and the 7 year Sabbaticals   as well as the 7 day Sabbaths?
 
Or did God know that a day when we ex-Hebrews were casting a goat into the wilderness would turn into a rabbinic day to ram (no pun) everything a rabbi wanted to tell us at all those Shabbats that we missed, into one giant 5 hour sermon, and God, Who has abundant mercy on us,  gave us a game to do with our Chumash?
____
Oy.
 
Well, Shavuah Tov!!
Rabbi Arthur Segal
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish Renewal
Jewish Spirituality
Eco Judaism
Hilton Head Island, SC
Savannah, GA
Bluffton, SC
Member Temple Oseh Shalom

 

A Short Snap Shot of Rabbi Arthur Segal

Rabbi Arthur Segal
United States
I am available for Shabbatons, and can speak on various aspects of Jewish history, (from the ancient past to modern day, and can be area specific, if a group wishes), Spirituality, developing a Personal Relationship with God, on the Jews of India and other 'exotic' communities, and on Talmud, Torah and other great texts. We have visited these exotic Jewish communities first hand. I adhere to the Mishna's edict of not using the Torah as a ''spade'', and do not ask for honorariums for my services. I am post-denominational and renewal and spiritually centered.
 I am available to perform Jewish weddings,  and other life cycle events, ONLY IF, it is  a destination wedding and the local full time pulpit rabbi is unavailable, or if there is no local full time pulpit rabbi,  or it is in my local area and all of the full time pulpit rabbis are unavailable.
 My post-doc in Psych from Penn helps tremendously when I do Rabbinic counseling. My phone number and address will be made available once I am sure of one's sincerity in working with me.
Rabbi Segal is the author of three books and many articles on Torah, Talmud and TaNaK and Jewish history. His books are : The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew, A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud, and  Spiritual Wisdom of our Talmudic Sages. The first two are published by Amazon through their publishing house, BookSurge.
For information on how to purchase these, please contact RabbiSegal@JewishSpiritualRenewal.net and visit WWW.JewishSpiritualRenewal.Net.  OR CLICK ON THE IMAGES BELOW. 
 Todah Rabah and Shalom uvracha. Rabbi Arthur Segal ,( Dr. Arthur Segal )RabbiASegal@aol.com
 
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THE HANDBOOK TO JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:
A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew

Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal distills millennia of sage advice into a step-by-step process to reclaim your Judaism and your spirituality in a concise easy-to-read and easy-to-follow manner.

If you find yourself wishing for the strength to sustain you through the ups and downs of life; if you want to learn how to live life to its fullest without angst, worry, low self-esteem or fear; or if you wish that your relationships with family, friends and co-workers were based on love and service and free of ego, arguments, resentments and feelings of being unloved...this book is for you.

Price: $19.99
254 Pages
Published by: Amazon's BookSurge

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Click to Order
A SPIRITUAL AND ETHICAL COMPENDIUM
TO THE TORAH AND TALMUD

Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal dissects each of the Torah's weekly sections (parashot) using the Talmud and other rabbinic texts to show the true Jewish take on what the Torah is trying to teach us. This companion to The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew brings the Torah alive with daily relevance to the Modern Jew.

All of the Torah can be summed up in one word: Chesed. It means kindness. The Talmud teaches that the Torah is about loving our fellow man and that we are to go and study. The rest is commentary. This compendium clarifies the commentary and allows one to study Torah and Talmud to learn the Judaic ideals of love, forgiveness, kindness, mercy and peace. A must read for all Jews and deserves a place in every Jewish home.

Price: $24.99
494 Pages
Published by: Amazon's BookSurge

Welcome to Rabbi Arthur Segal's Jewish Spiritual Renewal bookstore. We invite you to create an account with us if you like, or shop as a guest. Either way, your shopping cart will be active until you leave the store.

You can purchase each book individually, but if you purchase them together as a set with the Tzadakkah Bundle, I will donate a portion of the sales price in your name to a tzadakkah of your choice, such as your synagogue.

Simply provide the donation information in the "Special Instructions" box during checkout. When doing so, please include the following:

  • Name of Organization
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Thank you for visiting.

(001) The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal

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In The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew, Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal distills millennia of sage advice to reclaim your Judaism and your spirituality.

  • Price : $19.99

(002) A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud

http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/product.sc;jsessionid=D63E50225C81C04275934EB69E00F6C1.qscstrfrnt04?categoryId=1&productId=2

A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud dissects each of the Torah's weekly sections (parashot) using the Talmud and other rabbinic texts to show the true Jewish take on what the Torah is trying to teach us.

  • Price : $24.99

(003) Tzadakkah Bundle

http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/product.sc;jsessionid=D63E50225C81C04275934EB69E00F6C1.qscstrfrnt04?categoryId=1&productId=3

The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal and A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud. Purchase both books as a set, and I will donate a portion of the sales price in your name to the tzadakkah of your choice. -- Rabbi Segal

  • Price : $44.98
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RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:SPIRITUAL+ETHICAL COMPENDIUM TO TORAH+TALMUD:JEWISH ETHICS

RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:SPIRITUAL+ETHICAL COMPENDIUM TO TORAH+TALMUD:JEWISH ETHICS 
 
Shavuah Tov:
 
It was the Talmudic sage Chanina ben Hama who said, "I have learned much from my teachers, from my colleagues even more, but from my students I have learned the most." (Talmud Bavli Tractate Ta'anit 7a).
 
In my posting on:
Rabbi Arthur Segal: RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:ALL BEGINNINGS ARE HARD:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL: CHAIM POTOK  a www.JewishSpiritualRenewal.org essay to help those going thru changes due to the economy, I received some interesting feedback from Talmidim v Chaverim. As with all Talmudic discussions we end up far off the track. That is what makes studying Talmud fun.
 
Dr. Chris B writes: Here's a little footnote for the discussion on whether or not the first steps of creation were hard for God.

Even though the common understanding today is that the  letter "bet" was placed first in the creation of the world so that it would be a blessing (Zohar I 3a), an older story from Genesis Rabbah (Genesis Rabbah XII:10)states that the universe was created with the letter "heh."

"R. Abbahu said in R. Johanan's name: He created them with the letter heh. All letters demand an effort to pronounce them, whereas the heh demands no effort.  Similarly, not with labor or wearying toil did the Holy One, blessed be He, create His world, but By the word of the Lord (Psalm 33:6), and The heavens were already made (ib.)."  (Genesis Rabbah XII:10)

The proof text for this view is Genesis 2:4, "These are the generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created."  According to Genesis Rabbah, the word for "when they were created," BEHIBBARAM, can be rewritten
as BET-HEH BARAM, "with 'heh' they were created," and since "heh" is just the sound that is made by expelling the breath through the mouth, it requires no effort.  This midrash also explains why on the Kabbalistic Tree of Life the first path from Keter to Chochmah has the letter "heh" assigned to it.

Whereas creation may be, for God, as effortless as aspiration is for us, I would also argue that this world is purposely set up so that beginnings are hard for people.  For example, think of a dream.  In a dream there are no physical laws to obey, and we can be it as soon as we dream it.  However, in this world we have to operate under constraints that we commonly refer to as the laws of physics.  In particular, Newton's First Law of Motion states that an object that is at rest will remain at rest until a force acts upon it.  In other words, every change in this world requires effort on our part. Is this a punitive restriction?  I don't think so because if there were no such constraints in our physical world, then our reality would be just as unstable as our dreams.  Consequently, the world is a much more stable and enduring place simply because change and beginnings do require effort on our part. 
---
Now  I love the midrash Dr Chris B. quoted. Of course YHWH or YHVH is all Breath, our last conscious  act before sleeping, our first conscious act upon waking , which we thank YHWH for in Modeh Ani. YHVH Breath   changes us from Adamah to Adam when we are born, and then when  He withdraws our last breath, changes us from Adam to Adamah again, when our soul departs to Olam Ha Ba.
----
 Judy  writes: Check out the first verse of Leviticus.  Start with the first yud, count 7 letters, circle the next letter.  Do this till you have four circles.  Too fun for words.
__
And then Marty wrote: (And this is fun as well):
Yes. We get YHVH from doing letter counting with  Leviticus
 
But here is some more fun to do during boring rabbinic sermons. Lol.
 
Go to Genesis. Start with the first Tuv ( Ivrit T in Beresheit). Count 50 letters to the Vuv. (with a vowel this V can be silent and just be an 'O' sound). Count 50 more to the Reish. Count 50 more to the Heh. Heh, guess what, we spelled, TORAH.
 
Now let's say its Yom Kippur and the sermon is really long and boring.
 
So flip to the start of Exodus. Start with the first Tuv (T at the end of the second word, Shemot, Names, which is what Exodus is really called.)
 
Count 50 letters and you come to a Vuv.  50 more  to Reish. 50 more  to Heh. Heh, heh, heh.... more Torah.
 
Now the rabbi's sermon is really getting bogged down. He is talking about teshuvah on Yom Kippur and he drove his Porsche to Temple and his wife packed him lunch.
 
So, ok, we flip to Numbers. Now the rabbi has our heads all backwards. So that is what we do. We go to the third heh. we count 50, and come to a reish. Count 50 more and come to a vuv. Count 50 more and come to a tuv. We have Torah backwards which is what the Rabbi on the bimah seems to be preaching.
 
Ok. The rabbi is still going on and on. Now the cantor is on his knees asking the congregation for forgiveness and saying how humble he is before them. The rabbi is complaining that he is more humble than the cantor. The president of the temple has called an emergency board meeting during the lunch time break of Yom Kippur at Wong's House of Dim Sum.
 
So we flip to Deuteronomy.
 
We have been taught that Deuteronomy doesn't really begin until the 5th verse where it says "Moses expounded on the Torah,'' as that is what the book is about. So we start with the heh in the word ha-yordin (the Jordan), and count 50, and come to a reish, and continue as we did in Numbers, and we have Torah backwards again.
 
So what do we have going from the The Beginning to the end of Torah?: Torah > Torah > YHVH < haroT < haroT .
 
Could this be code to remind us to obey the 50 year Yovels and the 7 year Sabbaticals   as well as the 7 day Sabbaths?
 
Or did God know that a day when we ex-Hebrews were casting a goat into the wilderness would turn into a rabbinic day to ram (no pun) everything a rabbi wanted to tell us at all those Shabbats that we missed, into one giant 5 hour sermon, and God, Who has abundant mercy on us,  gave us a game to do with our Chumash?
____
Oy.
 
Well, Shavuah Tov!!
Rabbi Arthur Segal
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish Renewal
Jewish Spirituality
Eco Judaism
Hilton Head Island, SC
Savannah, GA
Bluffton, SC
Member Temple Oseh Shalom

 

A Short Snap Shot of Rabbi Arthur Segal

Rabbi Arthur Segal
United States
I am available for Shabbatons, and can speak on various aspects of Jewish history, (from the ancient past to modern day, and can be area specific, if a group wishes), Spirituality, developing a Personal Relationship with God, on the Jews of India and other 'exotic' communities, and on Talmud, Torah and other great texts. We have visited these exotic Jewish communities first hand. I adhere to the Mishna's edict of not using the Torah as a ''spade'', and do not ask for honorariums for my services. I am post-denominational and renewal and spiritually centered.
 I am available to perform Jewish weddings,  and other life cycle events, ONLY IF, it is  a destination wedding and the local full time pulpit rabbi is unavailable, or if there is no local full time pulpit rabbi,  or it is in my local area and all of the full time pulpit rabbis are unavailable.
 My post-doc in Psych from Penn helps tremendously when I do Rabbinic counseling. My phone number and address will be made available once I am sure of one's sincerity in working with me.
Rabbi Segal is the author of three books and many articles on Torah, Talmud and TaNaK and Jewish history. His books are : The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew, A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud, and  Spiritual Wisdom of our Talmudic Sages. The first two are published by Amazon through their publishing house, BookSurge.
For information on how to purchase these, please contact RabbiSegal@JewishSpiritualRenewal.net and visit WWW.JewishSpiritualRenewal.Net.  OR CLICK ON THE IMAGES BELOW. 
 Todah Rabah and Shalom uvracha. Rabbi Arthur Segal ,( Dr. Arthur Segal )RabbiASegal@aol.com
 
http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/main.sc
Click to Order
THE HANDBOOK TO JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:
A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew

Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal distills millennia of sage advice into a step-by-step process to reclaim your Judaism and your spirituality in a concise easy-to-read and easy-to-follow manner.

If you find yourself wishing for the strength to sustain you through the ups and downs of life; if you want to learn how to live life to its fullest without angst, worry, low self-esteem or fear; or if you wish that your relationships with family, friends and co-workers were based on love and service and free of ego, arguments, resentments and feelings of being unloved...this book is for you.

Price: $19.99
254 Pages
Published by: Amazon's BookSurge

http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/main.sc
Click to Order
A SPIRITUAL AND ETHICAL COMPENDIUM
TO THE TORAH AND TALMUD

Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal dissects each of the Torah's weekly sections (parashot) using the Talmud and other rabbinic texts to show the true Jewish take on what the Torah is trying to teach us. This companion to The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew brings the Torah alive with daily relevance to the Modern Jew.

All of the Torah can be summed up in one word: Chesed. It means kindness. The Talmud teaches that the Torah is about loving our fellow man and that we are to go and study. The rest is commentary. This compendium clarifies the commentary and allows one to study Torah and Talmud to learn the Judaic ideals of love, forgiveness, kindness, mercy and peace. A must read for all Jews and deserves a place in every Jewish home.

Price: $24.99
494 Pages
Published by: Amazon's BookSurge

Welcome to Rabbi Arthur Segal's Jewish Spiritual Renewal bookstore. We invite you to create an account with us if you like, or shop as a guest. Either way, your shopping cart will be active until you leave the store.

You can purchase each book individually, but if you purchase them together as a set with the Tzadakkah Bundle, I will donate a portion of the sales price in your name to a tzadakkah of your choice, such as your synagogue.

Simply provide the donation information in the "Special Instructions" box during checkout. When doing so, please include the following:

  • Name of Organization
  • Contact Name and eMail Address
  • Organization Mailing Address
  • Organization Phone Number

Thank you for visiting.

(001) The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal

http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/product.sc;jsessionid=D63E50225C81C04275934EB69E00F6C1.qscstrfrnt04?categoryId=1&productId=1

In The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew, Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal distills millennia of sage advice to reclaim your Judaism and your spirituality.

  • Price : $19.99

(002) A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud

http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/product.sc;jsessionid=D63E50225C81C04275934EB69E00F6C1.qscstrfrnt04?categoryId=1&productId=2

A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud dissects each of the Torah's weekly sections (parashot) using the Talmud and other rabbinic texts to show the true Jewish take on what the Torah is trying to teach us.

  • Price : $24.99

(003) Tzadakkah Bundle

http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/product.sc;jsessionid=D63E50225C81C04275934EB69E00F6C1.qscstrfrnt04?categoryId=1&productId=3

The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal and A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud. Purchase both books as a set, and I will donate a portion of the sales price in your name to the tzadakkah of your choice. -- Rabbi Segal

  • Price : $44.98
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjaY4RMOV7gRBYyL0qXE2nmHK6emtrnCPNHWCgYOM4wzxaZBi4MIgyzkLbClMeLEpnwHf5o9nz4-1LJIdd5d-lqnbJy1NIdN7UCn3TMErEoy4z9eiaYuw5OZSJQ_fsbNBYwhgv-eXq4qXY/s1600-h/RABBISBOOKS+PEF.png

 
 
 

RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:ECO JUDAISM:By the word of the Lord:not with labor:God create

RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:ECO JUDAISM:By the word of the Lord:not with labor:God create
 
Shavuah Tov:
 
It was the Talmudic sage Chanina ben Hama who said, "I have learned much from my teachers, from my colleagues even more, but from my students I have learned the most." (Talmud Bavli Tractate Ta'anit 7a).
 
In my posting on:
Rabbi Arthur Segal: RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:ALL BEGINNINGS ARE HARD:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL: CHAIM POTOK  a www.JewishSpiritualRenewal.org essay to help those going thru changes due to the economy, I received some interesting feedback from Talmidim v Chaverim. As with all Talmudic discussions we end up far off the track. That is what makes studying Talmud fun.
 
Dr. Chris B writes: Here's a little footnote for the discussion on whether or not the first steps of creation were hard for God.

Even though the common understanding today is that the  letter "bet" was placed first in the creation of the world so that it would be a blessing (Zohar I 3a), an older story from Genesis Rabbah (Genesis Rabbah XII:10)states that the universe was created with the letter "heh."

"R. Abbahu said in R. Johanan's name: He created them with the letter heh. All letters demand an effort to pronounce them, whereas the heh demands no effort.  Similarly, not with labor or wearying toil did the Holy One, blessed be He, create His world, but By the word of the Lord (Psalm 33:6), and The heavens were already made (ib.)."  (Genesis Rabbah XII:10)

The proof text for this view is Genesis 2:4, "These are the generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created."  According to Genesis Rabbah, the word for "when they were created," BEHIBBARAM, can be rewritten
as BET-HEH BARAM, "with 'heh' they were created," and since "heh" is just the sound that is made by expelling the breath through the mouth, it requires no effort.  This midrash also explains why on the Kabbalistic Tree of Life the first path from Keter to Chochmah has the letter "heh" assigned to it.

Whereas creation may be, for God, as effortless as aspiration is for us, I would also argue that this world is purposely set up so that beginnings are hard for people.  For example, think of a dream.  In a dream there are no physical laws to obey, and we can be it as soon as we dream it.  However, in this world we have to operate under constraints that we commonly refer to as the laws of physics.  In particular, Newton's First Law of Motion states that an object that is at rest will remain at rest until a force acts upon it.  In other words, every change in this world requires effort on our part. Is this a punitive restriction?  I don't think so because if there were no such constraints in our physical world, then our reality would be just as unstable as our dreams.  Consequently, the world is a much more stable and enduring place simply because change and beginnings do require effort on our part. 
---
Now  I love the midrash Dr Chris B. quoted. Of course YHWH or YHVH is all Breath, our last conscious  act before sleeping, our first conscious act upon waking , which we thank YHWH for in Modeh Ani. YHVH Breath   changes us from Adamah to Adam when we are born, and then when  He withdraws our last breath, changes us from Adam to Adamah again, when our soul departs to Olam Ha Ba.
----
 Judy  writes: Check out the first verse of Leviticus.  Start with the first yud, count 7 letters, circle the next letter.  Do this till you have four circles.  Too fun for words.
__
And then Marty wrote: (And this is fun as well):
Yes. We get YHVH from doing letter counting with  Leviticus
 
But here is some more fun to do during boring rabbinic sermons. Lol.
 
Go to Genesis. Start with the first Tuv ( Ivrit T in Beresheit). Count 50 letters to the Vuv. (with a vowel this V can be silent and just be an 'O' sound). Count 50 more to the Reish. Count 50 more to the Heh. Heh, guess what, we spelled, TORAH.
 
Now let's say its Yom Kippur and the sermon is really long and boring.
 
So flip to the start of Exodus. Start with the first Tuv (T at the end of the second word, Shemot, Names, which is what Exodus is really called.)
 
Count 50 letters and you come to a Vuv.  50 more  to Reish. 50 more  to Heh. Heh, heh, heh.... more Torah.
 
Now the rabbi's sermon is really getting bogged down. He is talking about teshuvah on Yom Kippur and he drove his Porsche to Temple and his wife packed him lunch.
 
So, ok, we flip to Numbers. Now the rabbi has our heads all backwards. So that is what we do. We go to the third heh. we count 50, and come to a reish. Count 50 more and come to a vuv. Count 50 more and come to a tuv. We have Torah backwards which is what the Rabbi on the bimah seems to be preaching.
 
Ok. The rabbi is still going on and on. Now the cantor is on his knees asking the congregation for forgiveness and saying how humble he is before them. The rabbi is complaining that he is more humble than the cantor. The president of the temple has called an emergency board meeting during the lunch time break of Yom Kippur at Wong's House of Dim Sum.
 
So we flip to Deuteronomy.
 
We have been taught that Deuteronomy doesn't really begin until the 5th verse where it says "Moses expounded on the Torah,'' as that is what the book is about. So we start with the heh in the word ha-yordin (the Jordan), and count 50, and come to a reish, and continue as we did in Numbers, and we have Torah backwards again.
 
So what do we have going from the The Beginning to the end of Torah?: Torah > Torah > YHVH < haroT < haroT .
 
Could this be code to remind us to obey the 50 year Yovels and the 7 year Sabbaticals   as well as the 7 day Sabbaths?
 
Or did God know that a day when we ex-Hebrews were casting a goat into the wilderness would turn into a rabbinic day to ram (no pun) everything a rabbi wanted to tell us at all those Shabbats that we missed, into one giant 5 hour sermon, and God, Who has abundant mercy on us,  gave us a game to do with our Chumash?
____
Oy.
 
Well, Shavuah Tov!!
Rabbi Arthur Segal
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish Renewal
Jewish Spirituality
Eco Judaism
Hilton Head Island, SC
Savannah, GA
Bluffton, SC
Member Temple Oseh Shalom

 

A Short Snap Shot of Rabbi Arthur Segal

Rabbi Arthur Segal
United States
I am available for Shabbatons, and can speak on various aspects of Jewish history, (from the ancient past to modern day, and can be area specific, if a group wishes), Spirituality, developing a Personal Relationship with God, on the Jews of India and other 'exotic' communities, and on Talmud, Torah and other great texts. We have visited these exotic Jewish communities first hand. I adhere to the Mishna's edict of not using the Torah as a ''spade'', and do not ask for honorariums for my services. I am post-denominational and renewal and spiritually centered.
 I am available to perform Jewish weddings,  and other life cycle events, ONLY IF, it is  a destination wedding and the local full time pulpit rabbi is unavailable, or if there is no local full time pulpit rabbi,  or it is in my local area and all of the full time pulpit rabbis are unavailable.
 My post-doc in Psych from Penn helps tremendously when I do Rabbinic counseling. My phone number and address will be made available once I am sure of one's sincerity in working with me.
Rabbi Segal is the author of three books and many articles on Torah, Talmud and TaNaK and Jewish history. His books are : The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew, A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud, and  Spiritual Wisdom of our Talmudic Sages. The first two are published by Amazon through their publishing house, BookSurge.
For information on how to purchase these, please contact RabbiSegal@JewishSpiritualRenewal.net and visit WWW.JewishSpiritualRenewal.Net.  OR CLICK ON THE IMAGES BELOW. 
 Todah Rabah and Shalom uvracha. Rabbi Arthur Segal ,( Dr. Arthur Segal )RabbiASegal@aol.com
 
http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/main.sc
Click to Order
THE HANDBOOK TO JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:
A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew

Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal distills millennia of sage advice into a step-by-step process to reclaim your Judaism and your spirituality in a concise easy-to-read and easy-to-follow manner.

If you find yourself wishing for the strength to sustain you through the ups and downs of life; if you want to learn how to live life to its fullest without angst, worry, low self-esteem or fear; or if you wish that your relationships with family, friends and co-workers were based on love and service and free of ego, arguments, resentments and feelings of being unloved...this book is for you.

Price: $19.99
254 Pages
Published by: Amazon's BookSurge

http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/main.sc
Click to Order
A SPIRITUAL AND ETHICAL COMPENDIUM
TO THE TORAH AND TALMUD

Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal dissects each of the Torah's weekly sections (parashot) using the Talmud and other rabbinic texts to show the true Jewish take on what the Torah is trying to teach us. This companion to The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew brings the Torah alive with daily relevance to the Modern Jew.

All of the Torah can be summed up in one word: Chesed. It means kindness. The Talmud teaches that the Torah is about loving our fellow man and that we are to go and study. The rest is commentary. This compendium clarifies the commentary and allows one to study Torah and Talmud to learn the Judaic ideals of love, forgiveness, kindness, mercy and peace. A must read for all Jews and deserves a place in every Jewish home.

Price: $24.99
494 Pages
Published by: Amazon's BookSurge

Welcome to Rabbi Arthur Segal's Jewish Spiritual Renewal bookstore. We invite you to create an account with us if you like, or shop as a guest. Either way, your shopping cart will be active until you leave the store.

You can purchase each book individually, but if you purchase them together as a set with the Tzadakkah Bundle, I will donate a portion of the sales price in your name to a tzadakkah of your choice, such as your synagogue.

Simply provide the donation information in the "Special Instructions" box during checkout. When doing so, please include the following:

  • Name of Organization
  • Contact Name and eMail Address
  • Organization Mailing Address
  • Organization Phone Number

Thank you for visiting.

(001) The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal

http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/product.sc;jsessionid=D63E50225C81C04275934EB69E00F6C1.qscstrfrnt04?categoryId=1&productId=1

In The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew, Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal distills millennia of sage advice to reclaim your Judaism and your spirituality.

  • Price : $19.99

(002) A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud

http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/product.sc;jsessionid=D63E50225C81C04275934EB69E00F6C1.qscstrfrnt04?categoryId=1&productId=2

A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud dissects each of the Torah's weekly sections (parashot) using the Talmud and other rabbinic texts to show the true Jewish take on what the Torah is trying to teach us.

  • Price : $24.99

(003) Tzadakkah Bundle

http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/product.sc;jsessionid=D63E50225C81C04275934EB69E00F6C1.qscstrfrnt04?categoryId=1&productId=3

The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal and A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud. Purchase both books as a set, and I will donate a portion of the sales price in your name to the tzadakkah of your choice. -- Rabbi Segal

  • Price : $44.98
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjaY4RMOV7gRBYyL0qXE2nmHK6emtrnCPNHWCgYOM4wzxaZBi4MIgyzkLbClMeLEpnwHf5o9nz4-1LJIdd5d-lqnbJy1NIdN7UCn3TMErEoy4z9eiaYuw5OZSJQ_fsbNBYwhgv-eXq4qXY/s1600-h/RABBISBOOKS+PEF.png

 
 
 

RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:HANDBOOK TO JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:PATH OF TRANSFORMATION

RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:HANDBOOK TO JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:PATH OF TRANSFORMATION
 
 
Shavuah Tov:
 
It was the Talmudic sage Chanina ben Hama who said, "I have learned much from my teachers, from my colleagues even more, but from my students I have learned the most." (Talmud Bavli Tractate Ta'anit 7a).
 
In my posting on:
Rabbi Arthur Segal: RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:ALL BEGINNINGS ARE HARD:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL: CHAIM POTOK  a www.JewishSpiritualRenewal.org essay to help those going thru changes due to the economy, I received some interesting feedback from Talmidim v Chaverim. As with all Talmudic discussions we end up far off the track. That is what makes studying Talmud fun.
 
Dr. Chris B writes: Here's a little footnote for the discussion on whether or not the first steps of creation were hard for God.

Even though the common understanding today is that the  letter "bet" was placed first in the creation of the world so that it would be a blessing (Zohar I 3a), an older story from Genesis Rabbah (Genesis Rabbah XII:10)states that the universe was created with the letter "heh."

"R. Abbahu said in R. Johanan's name: He created them with the letter heh. All letters demand an effort to pronounce them, whereas the heh demands no effort.  Similarly, not with labor or wearying toil did the Holy One, blessed be He, create His world, but By the word of the Lord (Psalm 33:6), and The heavens were already made (ib.)."  (Genesis Rabbah XII:10)

The proof text for this view is Genesis 2:4, "These are the generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created."  According to Genesis Rabbah, the word for "when they were created," BEHIBBARAM, can be rewritten
as BET-HEH BARAM, "with 'heh' they were created," and since "heh" is just the sound that is made by expelling the breath through the mouth, it requires no effort.  This midrash also explains why on the Kabbalistic Tree of Life the first path from Keter to Chochmah has the letter "heh" assigned to it.

Whereas creation may be, for God, as effortless as aspiration is for us, I would also argue that this world is purposely set up so that beginnings are hard for people.  For example, think of a dream.  In a dream there are no physical laws to obey, and we can be it as soon as we dream it.  However, in this world we have to operate under constraints that we commonly refer to as the laws of physics.  In particular, Newton's First Law of Motion states that an object that is at rest will remain at rest until a force acts upon it.  In other words, every change in this world requires effort on our part. Is this a punitive restriction?  I don't think so because if there were no such constraints in our physical world, then our reality would be just as unstable as our dreams.  Consequently, the world is a much more stable and enduring place simply because change and beginnings do require effort on our part. 
---
Now  I love the midrash Dr Chris B. quoted. Of course YHWH or YHVH is all Breath, our last conscious  act before sleeping, our first conscious act upon waking , which we thank YHWH for in Modeh Ani. YHVH Breath   changes us from Adamah to Adam when we are born, and then when  He withdraws our last breath, changes us from Adam to Adamah again, when our soul departs to Olam Ha Ba.
----
 Judy  writes: Check out the first verse of Leviticus.  Start with the first yud, count 7 letters, circle the next letter.  Do this till you have four circles.  Too fun for words.
__
And then Marty wrote: (And this is fun as well):
Yes. We get YHVH from doing letter counting with  Leviticus
 
But here is some more fun to do during boring rabbinic sermons. Lol.
 
Go to Genesis. Start with the first Tuv ( Ivrit T in Beresheit). Count 50 letters to the Vuv. (with a vowel this V can be silent and just be an 'O' sound). Count 50 more to the Reish. Count 50 more to the Heh. Heh, guess what, we spelled, TORAH.
 
Now let's say its Yom Kippur and the sermon is really long and boring.
 
So flip to the start of Exodus. Start with the first Tuv (T at the end of the second word, Shemot, Names, which is what Exodus is really called.)
 
Count 50 letters and you come to a Vuv.  50 more  to Reish. 50 more  to Heh. Heh, heh, heh.... more Torah.
 
Now the rabbi's sermon is really getting bogged down. He is talking about teshuvah on Yom Kippur and he drove his Porsche to Temple and his wife packed him lunch.
 
So, ok, we flip to Numbers. Now the rabbi has our heads all backwards. So that is what we do. We go to the third heh. we count 50, and come to a reish. Count 50 more and come to a vuv. Count 50 more and come to a tuv. We have Torah backwards which is what the Rabbi on the bimah seems to be preaching.
 
Ok. The rabbi is still going on and on. Now the cantor is on his knees asking the congregation for forgiveness and saying how humble he is before them. The rabbi is complaining that he is more humble than the cantor. The president of the temple has called an emergency board meeting during the lunch time break of Yom Kippur at Wong's House of Dim Sum.
 
So we flip to Deuteronomy.
 
We have been taught that Deuteronomy doesn't really begin until the 5th verse where it says "Moses expounded on the Torah,'' as that is what the book is about. So we start with the heh in the word ha-yordin (the Jordan), and count 50, and come to a reish, and continue as we did in Numbers, and we have Torah backwards again.
 
So what do we have going from the The Beginning to the end of Torah?: Torah > Torah > YHVH < haroT < haroT .
 
Could this be code to remind us to obey the 50 year Yovels and the 7 year Sabbaticals   as well as the 7 day Sabbaths?
 
Or did God know that a day when we ex-Hebrews were casting a goat into the wilderness would turn into a rabbinic day to ram (no pun) everything a rabbi wanted to tell us at all those Shabbats that we missed, into one giant 5 hour sermon, and God, Who has abundant mercy on us,  gave us a game to do with our Chumash?
____
Oy.
 
Well, Shavuah Tov!!
Rabbi Arthur Segal
Jewish Spiritual Renewal
Jewish Renewal
Jewish Spirituality
Eco Judaism
Hilton Head Island, SC
Savannah, GA
Bluffton, SC
Member Temple Oseh Shalom

 

A Short Snap Shot of Rabbi Arthur Segal

Rabbi Arthur Segal
United States
I am available for Shabbatons, and can speak on various aspects of Jewish history, (from the ancient past to modern day, and can be area specific, if a group wishes), Spirituality, developing a Personal Relationship with God, on the Jews of India and other 'exotic' communities, and on Talmud, Torah and other great texts. We have visited these exotic Jewish communities first hand. I adhere to the Mishna's edict of not using the Torah as a ''spade'', and do not ask for honorariums for my services. I am post-denominational and renewal and spiritually centered.
 I am available to perform Jewish weddings,  and other life cycle events, ONLY IF, it is  a destination wedding and the local full time pulpit rabbi is unavailable, or if there is no local full time pulpit rabbi,  or it is in my local area and all of the full time pulpit rabbis are unavailable.
 My post-doc in Psych from Penn helps tremendously when I do Rabbinic counseling. My phone number and address will be made available once I am sure of one's sincerity in working with me.
Rabbi Segal is the author of three books and many articles on Torah, Talmud and TaNaK and Jewish history. His books are : The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew, A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud, and  Spiritual Wisdom of our Talmudic Sages. The first two are published by Amazon through their publishing house, BookSurge.
For information on how to purchase these, please contact RabbiSegal@JewishSpiritualRenewal.net and visit WWW.JewishSpiritualRenewal.Net.  OR CLICK ON THE IMAGES BELOW. 
 Todah Rabah and Shalom uvracha. Rabbi Arthur Segal ,( Dr. Arthur Segal )RabbiASegal@aol.com
 
http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/main.sc
Click to Order
THE HANDBOOK TO JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:
A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew

Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal distills millennia of sage advice into a step-by-step process to reclaim your Judaism and your spirituality in a concise easy-to-read and easy-to-follow manner.

If you find yourself wishing for the strength to sustain you through the ups and downs of life; if you want to learn how to live life to its fullest without angst, worry, low self-esteem or fear; or if you wish that your relationships with family, friends and co-workers were based on love and service and free of ego, arguments, resentments and feelings of being unloved...this book is for you.

Price: $19.99
254 Pages
Published by: Amazon's BookSurge

http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/main.sc
Click to Order
A SPIRITUAL AND ETHICAL COMPENDIUM
TO THE TORAH AND TALMUD

Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal dissects each of the Torah's weekly sections (parashot) using the Talmud and other rabbinic texts to show the true Jewish take on what the Torah is trying to teach us. This companion to The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew brings the Torah alive with daily relevance to the Modern Jew.

All of the Torah can be summed up in one word: Chesed. It means kindness. The Talmud teaches that the Torah is about loving our fellow man and that we are to go and study. The rest is commentary. This compendium clarifies the commentary and allows one to study Torah and Talmud to learn the Judaic ideals of love, forgiveness, kindness, mercy and peace. A must read for all Jews and deserves a place in every Jewish home.

Price: $24.99
494 Pages
Published by: Amazon's BookSurge

Welcome to Rabbi Arthur Segal's Jewish Spiritual Renewal bookstore. We invite you to create an account with us if you like, or shop as a guest. Either way, your shopping cart will be active until you leave the store.

You can purchase each book individually, but if you purchase them together as a set with the Tzadakkah Bundle, I will donate a portion of the sales price in your name to a tzadakkah of your choice, such as your synagogue.

Simply provide the donation information in the "Special Instructions" box during checkout. When doing so, please include the following:

  • Name of Organization
  • Contact Name and eMail Address
  • Organization Mailing Address
  • Organization Phone Number

Thank you for visiting.

(001) The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal

http://www.shop.jewishspiritualrenewal.net/product.sc;jsessionid=D63E50225C81C04275934EB69E00F6C1.qscstrfrnt04?categoryId=1&productId=1

In The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew, Rabbi Dr. Arthur Segal distills millennia of sage advice to reclaim your Judaism and your spirituality.

  • Price : $19.99

(002) A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud

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A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud dissects each of the Torah's weekly sections (parashot) using the Talmud and other rabbinic texts to show the true Jewish take on what the Torah is trying to teach us.

  • Price : $24.99

(003) Tzadakkah Bundle

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The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal and A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud. Purchase both books as a set, and I will donate a portion of the sales price in your name to the tzadakkah of your choice. -- Rabbi Segal

  • Price : $44.98
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